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Category: Science

Your glitchy video calls may make people mistrust you
Science

Your glitchy video calls may make people mistrust you

Really Simple SyndicationDecember 3, 2025

Brief glitches in video calls may seem like no big deal, but new research shows they can have a negative effect on how a person

What do birds think of forest management?
Science

What do birds think of forest management?

Really Simple SyndicationDecember 3, 2025

A group in Western Washington state has developed a novel gauge for their forest conservation work — thousands of audio recordings of native birds.

Science

Human-caused earthquakes are real. Here’s why even stable regions can snap

Rohini SubrahmanyamDecember 3, 2025

Human activity can cause “healed” faults to release their stored strength, triggering unexpected quakes in tectonically stable regions.

Giant rotating string of 14 galaxies is ‘probably the largest spinning object’ in the known universe
Science

Giant rotating string of 14 galaxies is ‘probably the largest spinning object’ in the known universe

Really Simple SyndicationDecember 3, 2025

A giant rotating filament of the cosmic web may be the largest spinning structure ever seen, and could help reveal how galaxies form.

Ancient ‘hanging coffin’ people in China finally identified — and their descendants still live there today
Science

Ancient ‘hanging coffin’ people in China finally identified — and their descendants still live there today

Really Simple SyndicationDecember 3, 2025

People buried in “hanging coffins” thousands of years ago in China and Southeast Asia have finally been identified through DNA research.

Today’s biggest science news: Aurora alert issued in U.S. | Sterile neutrinos | Seven-armed octopus
Science

Today’s biggest science news: Aurora alert issued in U.S. | Sterile neutrinos | Seven-armed octopus

Really Simple SyndicationDecember 3, 2025

Wednesday, Dec. 3, 2025: Your daily feed of the biggest discoveries and breakthroughs making headlines.

‘An extreme end of human genetic variation’: Ancient humans were isolated in southern Africa for nearly 100,000 years, and their genetics are stunningly different
Science

‘An extreme end of human genetic variation’: Ancient humans were isolated in southern Africa for nearly 100,000 years, and their genetics are stunningly different

Really Simple SyndicationDecember 3, 2025

Ancient genomes from southern Africa show that people evolved in isolation for upward of 100,000 years.

China has planted so many trees it’s changed the entire country’s water distribution
Science

China has planted so many trees it’s changed the entire country’s water distribution

Really Simple SyndicationDecember 3, 2025

Huge “regreening” efforts in China over the past few decades have activated the country’s water cycle and moved water in ways that scientists are just

Death Valley’s ‘world’s hottest temperature’ record may be due to a human error
Science

Death Valley’s ‘world’s hottest temperature’ record may be due to a human error

Really Simple SyndicationDecember 3, 2025

A new analysis of July temperatures in Death Valley between 1923 and 2024 suggests the world record near-surface air temperature of 134 F measured in

Science

Ancient DNA reveals China’s first ‘pet’ cat wasn’t the house cat

Bethany BrookshireDecember 3, 2025

The modern house cat reached China in the 8th century. Before that, another cat — the leopard cat — hunted the rodents in ancient Chinese

Science

Ancient southern Africans took genetic evolution in a new direction

Bruce BowerDecember 3, 2025

An ancient, shared set of human-specific genes underwent changes in a geographically isolated population after around 300,000 years ago, scientists say.

Waxing Gibbous Moon
Science

Waxing Gibbous Moon

Really Simple SyndicationDecember 3, 2025

The waxing gibbous Moon rises above Earth’s blue atmosphere in this photograph taken from the International Space Station as it orbited 263 miles above a

When an AI algorithm is labeled ‘female,’ people are more likely to exploit it
Science

When an AI algorithm is labeled ‘female,’ people are more likely to exploit it

Really Simple SyndicationDecember 3, 2025

People who played the “Prisoner’s Dilemma” were less likely to cooperate when the other player was a male human or AI, and exploited female players.

Diagnostic dilemma: A woman got a rare parasitic lung infection after eating raw frogs
Science

Diagnostic dilemma: A woman got a rare parasitic lung infection after eating raw frogs

Really Simple SyndicationDecember 3, 2025

In an unusual case, a woman developed a parasitic infection in her lungs, when more typically, the parasite stays just under the skin.

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